the last month- 0“ seem to amt! the "rim- an: vow gun The men 0° on 3 mm row h" they m ‘on the mama-ad "to! mu 3 3.0" mice * man 50 Mt above much :- «5'! "W" ï¬nds. .Xoroover. it. the trsdfl‘thtt few an work when the though ever go little. their way to Port more tun m hum unflalpuch. From he â€petunia munchies“ .gleorpMVI. nmmmador blah rope to an '30 vuy or mum-n hit out to ï¬ll"- ï¬nd hold ‘on tho‘abla. n: the 08!?! the “mutton: sultan ":90qu only ten null. this n; 'to tumultuou- ore of Int], 100.000.- to unity. it 1: Mid on It about a the Dunderlud. M the litter. u t‘ we: and! one-ball tree m acids. In the Wetland syndicate In! almdy the mum at the men have refund tern. ‘ w--, V may plulm ll IO nysmmddototido ,m4hamllon at o. mwgmbytho Id 0! in Wk. 0n nucmpouownâ€" 3‘31“ Sikh “‘4- â€gm at vhtch W.“ :50 to â€Mourns: I. water below hill» India. wonderful pm of the- «his all which he Horne. but you (to var-132: tr-ï¬rom ’03.}oudmouu - u “m new mando- tome and iron on «W M by the um: late of London. an. about £0,000,000 tons: » recent report! from ï¬ve been outstripped o! mm more anon-in wanton. Olden. In it normal! parts 01’ In: 0! Iron on than surly (wenty mm: In I to Punvlk, right on pod harbor monum- sblo. Thu width of the I: called. to um, :- uh At wml_ places net of so“ hp been found to mount. Il- m'ds and. counting the i} Tiï¬ï¬nhfl h“. mplejï¬h beaten by r. but Wlbon mm to than . â€later minds [old I N"! 101°“- m. uncut am 93! will but lrâ€"r-rom In?“ "Certainly um I will phenom whenever you u must put at at for nip-l In! no my 02â€" uno son a: .11 my (by an' night. I: it rm '1. glut-M'- eon-Id- am. but you n+0 nu.- ny mount", )1. a monkey!“ did :01 he" sat. my Once in awhile We come across some road supervisor who does his work so faithfully and we“ that his constitu- ents conceds him the once as Ion: as he lives. \WW'w-v: ,, . V ’ Rockford, 1;. Correspondence Benched; It is an Mt now In select social cir- cle. to refer to a charming gm “.3 potato and not as peach.’ A Texas «Khulna; 2,200 pounds cold on the Chicago market recently to: $132, or 6 cents a pound. ' Short though the don crop»! the country may, be. than will be more than enough to make all the whisky. the oï¬ï¬o‘i‘ï¬ï¬'a'ééuhm jusflce of the peace did not he“ to know very much about law; This was well stated, for mighty few of them do. The Irish potato remarked to the,; sweet potato lately that for once _In“ their lives they were trotting 1n the' same class In the matter of priceâ€"yawn and murphies alike at 3 cents 3' Bend. We real gate in predicting that there win he no corn burned tor fuel in any part of the West the coming» winter. And yet in 1896 corn st IO'cents a bushel was a cheaper fuel than soft coal at $6 per ton. We noted lately the case of a creamâ€" ery which cost the stockholders $4,500 but I short time ago being closed out at sheriff: sale and bringing only 8425. Cmmerles depreciate in value pretty rapidly when, they are not used. ‘ It you shave a boy under 16 who has acquirgd _the cigarette habit, lick it o: of hlm. It is no use to spare him, for he misï¬t Just as well be kllled at 16 9.3 life to dle of palsy and Idlocy at The onion is never quite so attrac- tive to us as when we get a sniff of an onion new in some neighpor’s house as we so hlune to dinner: for as mean a root as the onion it has a good many fluctuating ways with it. Sheboygan county. Wis" maintains 106 chem actorteg and but one cream- ery, tad this is preparing to make cheese instead of butter. It would seem as though the cal: would have a pretty hard road to travel in that country. ' It may be that the best place ‘to .look for seed for next 'Jvur‘s crop 0 com will be in the cribs containing what is Iett In' the 1900 crop: but. be it there or In' the ï¬eld of this year, every man should luck sharp for his seed corn for The peculiar climatic conditions at the past summer tsvored the man who planted poor seed and planted his corn late. Because he wins out, this year it is no reason why his example should be followed, as he would tail nine years A new‘nttachmént for mowing ma- chines. a sort of dropper'or buncher, seems to be a. va‘iuabie help for certain kinds of work done by such machine. such as cutting flax. clover seed or any. grain crop which may be too short in straw (or the ordinary grain harves- out of ten. Tea culture. ostrich farming and the growing of dates are three new things which are att} ‘ting the attention of progressive as culturing. I: we can only succeed _in raising the tea and the ostrich plumes, We can depend upon our nice girls to make the dates. 4 next 7081'. F‘Irma abutting lines of country trol- ley systems are going to_ be very de- A state supyeme court ‘recently gav 1“,.14, .1 Hickety: pickety. my black hen, She lay’s good eggs for gentlemen; Gonuemen come everyday. To use what my black hen doth lay. ma Fax-mu- Jorkins. two pigs “J a soar. PUZZLE PICTURE. § The mechanical genius of many boys on the farm is nipped in the'bud by .laek o! appreciation and proper tools iwith whichto work. A workroom well [stocked is a prime necessity on a hm. .and such a room will prove more at- Etractive than the corner grocery to the ‘ boys on rainy days if they are properly :trained and encouraged. ‘ nimble property. Therm]! become as attmcttve an ant «Man regldence section of our lame cube and because ot’thetr ready access to maket wm pr -~ mote the best types of a diversiï¬ed um- culture. v i For the nï¬znth- or August and Sen- temhor there in nothing that will make pork so cheaply and so mpidly as a ï¬eld of rape 3nd sweet corn, supple- mented with a. ration of skim milk for the pigs. This is one of the realiy good things which every man growing hogs should know and call into practice. ienship. Agriculture remains the one buslnm the members of, which will never éom- blue to regulate production or prices. Every follow goes it on his own boy]: and always probably will. (Bo-opera- tion up to a certain pretty well deï¬ned limits may be and la successwully adopted by farmers, but combinations are practically out of the question. - One of the poorest things which this country exports is one of thea'e hog, oil or mining millionaires who tour Eu‘ rope with money to burn and disgust: a cultured and ancientcbivalry with a. blokish. barbarian eifronteryâ€"a get rich quick libel on all that is graceful, polite and courteous in American cm- I! a. datrymnn wm provide well. sur- ed clover hay. shes! oats cut when the grain is in the dough and corn ensilage, he need not buy bran or other costly rations furnishing protein for his dairy herd. Any cow will milk to her full average capacity fed the above ration. With a fmstless' September we shall. hue flue results from our fan garden. Planted Juiy 30, we had pknty of rad-. ï¬shes }n>20 days; in 30 days the string beans were in bloom, and in 35 days an early' variety of sweet corn was almost ready to tassel out. ' A m- tree was cut in Cream recently which made ulna saw logs averaging 14 feet in length, scaling 21.48: feet board manure, and the-lumbermen quit cutting of! saw logs when thelr diameter heacher less than 40 lathee. The product of this one tree wlien it reaches the consumer in the Central West Will bring over 31.000. a The average cost to a farmer to .se- sure a telephong line and outï¬t is about 83!). and thq phargg _f_ozj maintenance is 4.“: --.n 'W' â€"-.â€". vâ€"V. ~_,.V a mere nothing. Whén so useful and mat-flea) a thing can be obtained)“ so small a cost, no live, wideawake farmer should be without one. The telephone will pay for itself everyyear, besides keeping the women folks from having the blues. It is easier to make ï¬ne butter than ï¬ne cheese in cold weather, just why is not clear. The best ,cheese 'made is made from September and October mnk, when the cows as a whole are not in flash milk and when their ru- tions are the pickings of gratnflelds. the gunmen aitermath .0! the mead- OWs,‘ with a liberal ration of but com (adder with the ears left on. In the year 1861. the barrel ofï¬'our made at the Minneapolis mills Was' sent down the river to LaCrosse, thence by rail to Milwaukee. thence by‘lake ‘back‘to Duluth, within 150 miles of where it was manufactured, at a‘ cost of over $1 per barrel. Within the past thrpe years the same barrel of flour has been put on board cars at the mill and shipped to the seaboard for )ess than 25 cents. ., Hone wishes to grow a nice ever- green hedgeâ€"pf red cedar, for instance -such hedge should ,be' started with small trees which are low and bushy. It is the thickness of the base of a hedge which makes it its chief beauty and value, and this growth cannot’ be produced upon trees which are spindly 1"1 um when Ht Wt- Further. it in up m; “a persistent pruning and “Quaint of_th9 hm when you. _\_-A ‘A ~LAII ., u,AA_ In .! {If 1:14 am am, easily stand at the head. The widen-glow, lilting its yellow crown uhuve the cannas and coleus, may be mm: a hundred rods away. The ten “we: are ulna doing their beat. and l‘lvteor, Victoria ‘Augustn. Sunset. in rib, Bride and scores of others give 1'2 '11- daily olerinx o! fragrance and 1m f l‘( bu Wkl- 11¢, Phonograpbs m to be placed in the‘ Penna railway nation. to call out the traces at which the trains about to it m wiu stop. .\ patron of a Western cmmeryâ€"a twua, memo-I um mounuunuu- ru- o-operntlve concernâ€"VII arrested un- 81% the law of the state (or selling milk Burt Momma, I well known ranch ‘ioh tested lens than: a por cent or :nuncflntendent. has beennppolnted ap- miter tat. It was thought that he put 1mm of the company of mm. Which :m- in his milk. 011 m. hem-mg of will bo_modeled on military lino- Ind one it was shown that he wronged ‘wlll cor- rine a down picked men who ma'n, for he only received.pay for lure no. mm to tackle: the moat dal- , at butter (at has milk showed by ipema character! they my come Wt. The verdict met the hearty ap- ,ncrosn. The company will be stationed ' ~31 of all the creamery patrons. but ;in the 3000168833â€! part of the late. 3' ~ dairy commiuloner at the suite is With headquarters and base of supplies : a, stump as to how he can enforce 1111119 mountains. law in such eases. ‘ Captain Housman know personally .__-a A: 0|..- mnn whom ‘I III" M hi8 xi earned and paved up the sum 0! m0. she claiming that many young «0918 get married on much less money : :1 do well. This may be true. but it n no way elect: the general truth at l‘ :3 Statement made.‘lt ie‘like this: If a w. an; man. any, 24. with gaod health w :1 average intelligence, has not de- w taped such habits or industry and l "ift as to enable him to save up 8500 n its equivalent in property. he has :r t taken hold of life in‘n sufï¬ciently - “ioua and practical manner so that he :2 justiï¬ed in asking any girl'to marry â€he Iconschs and crown of 320 spar- w hawk- were dissected and exam‘ rd by the experts of the agricultural "‘nrtmentot Washington. In but on. as the remain- ot a same bird found. Ely-three contained other birds. moat- Enguah sparrows; 89 contained gm- and 12 other: _1nun_mals, 12 had Here is- thestory of an old agricul- ‘aI too]. His wife died. like enough ‘ erworked. when he was so. He ad- ‘rtised tor a new wife and got one :m the Denver region. He paid her '000 the day he married her. He maxed to live with her four months ‘d then one morning when the chores he done' went out back of the barn a put a bullet through his head. The zebel then trots into the probate urt and has one-third of the old .m‘s estate set 01! to her. Strange. but ï¬t the way of the world! ' . \ few days since we noted a teic~ me wire which stretched across :1 er which was‘loeded from one end the other with swallows membllnx rm their summer migration. It seemed he a regular roundup. Every little lie they would take flight and dc. -ihe an extended. circle high up. as push getting their bearings. and at t, when all the trunnts had been ï¬hered in, at a sitnal from their lead- away they went to the south. and a last swallow dinpmred until the ins days come gain. ll not take kindly to' the self denial" posed upon him in the euro 0! a wife a family. Poverty may have its com- usation’s. but it is certain that new irrieci fdk never realise them. Love. ionlight. poetry; are ethereal secesq ries oi’ courtship. but can never take 2 place of plain heelsteek. potatoes 6 bread and butter indispensable to e married state. It will be a mighty 0d thing when the average American :1 will weave into her romance the ought of the practical. question of lather theman she loves is able to cently and reasonably provide for r. A young man may be good in a use and,still not be worth shucks len it comes to caring for a wile and :uilyâ€"be lazy, shiftless or so gen- :illy incompetent and behiudhand at he drifts inevitably into the army commonplace poverty, existing. but It living. Women can smooth 3 man -wn after she marries him, but it is ry hard {or her to put any get up -d dust into a lay. shirtlessornery Zlow. Better that you girls set your p for the hardworking, practical slow who puts his money in the bank- stead of blowing it in on cigars. rcd ckties and livery hire. Then 'the ances are that you have a barouche: rlde in when you are 40 and a well' pointed American home to preside; er instead of having to take in wash-i :; to get your girl a spring hat. Swing 3500 Before Inning. l \ lady blend in Nebraska taken ex- - :wtlon to a statement made In. theee‘ tes some time ago to the eflect that i roung man- should npt marry until he .21 snakes, 29 spiders. and the ance of the burn had empty stom- s. This is surely an argument dust the kiiiing of this kind of “he September flowers are very beau- I] In the garden these waningyum: F (gin. The asters; u gracetu) and my 9.5 chryunthernums and giving most as great a. yarlï¬y of_ color 39d n. It Is not so much the money use]! it is the formation of industrious. momical and thrifty habits whkh are necessary to his future success. If 3 ans man up to 24 has spent. upon nself eve’ry dpllgr he has earned. he. .uty. ken dam-mine. wut’ it shall be' 1m? An Old Fool. E The legislature hu Just provided for 1. body of mm:- to patrol the extreme {southern part, of the territory. which borders upon Mexico. In order to run down the desperate chnncterl. includ- in; mood mumâ€. tattle thieves |and other criminal: who hide in that lwild. trucklou and mountainous re- sion. RANGERS IN ARIZONA. WT! muons: 1'0 33 BUN D0“. Phoenix, Adm. letter: The bed m u an element of Amorlcnn lite hu gradually been driven farther and tanner from the outpost- ot clvlllu- uon unul to the ordinary citizen he has become only 1 myth, eluted for the ex- clunlve beneï¬t of the dime novelist or the truer of Bowery tragedy: Burt loam-n Will 3". Glut“. of tpe Work of Running Dm “3nd Ion." One gets e zlimpu of the fut, how- ever. that though much reduced in numben. 1! not In quality. the frontier deependo still exists. from action re- cently then b the territorial govern- ment of Ar! “It'll seem rather odd to have to any to such fellow: a Hank Hnwkine. Dan Spear-man or Jerry Joy: ‘11de up. old man; your rope’e run out.‘ But I'll do in goodonaturedly. The litrthoeo tel- {Ion In livln' In the mesquite scrub and ithe sand holes is I. dog's life end half of ’em '1! be glad when It's over end thank me for mkiu' 'em In. 0! couue they'll object ae‘ long as there's any I‘powder left In the locker. but I shoot [pretty etady."_ . ., . |‘-__ _L-_A‘ ,u--. ._,m_, Burt might have been talking nbout shooting mountain lion, or mountnin sheep tor the matter otthat. no uncon- cerned did he seem nbout it.’ Burt is the nun: who years ago ran down the Mexican bandit Bel-wens, who shot the superintendent of the Calico Silver mine when he was on the way with the coin to pay oi! the IIICI.‘ Burt hnppened to be up in anotherlpnrt ot the territory ‘ut that time and was in Daszett when the story of the mur- der came into the camp. Sulnvem was a Mexican miner and hadbeen working in the Calico. At Just about the time when the superintendent was about! 1 half way to the camp SIIIVCI'HI started {to meet him. After shooting .the nu- perintendent the. Mexican took his horse and the money and struck oi! across the desert toward Utah. The horse gave out near the big deed lake of ' Paradise Valley. and Suinvnrau hud . nothing to do for it but run to the‘ coyote holes. He knew that by thiq time the men whose pay he had up- tured would be on his trail to usage the superintendent's denth. AL A |'__l__ Captain Mossmn known per-null! most of the men whom it will be his duty to capture and bring to Junta for atrocious crimes and it in more than likely that the (la-pent. chances" wul now organize a hand of their own to thwart In every way possible the ef- toru to capture them which will he made by the rnngerg . . 4“. Bets ure'betu (me 'mde hen that agar from date nelt er loam“ nor one of his ranger: will be living to tell the me or their upeflencu.‘ Housman. however. is u chlncter not to be (hunted by any such prophecies. He in a typlul Wanner. rm: a bl: massive frame, u: eye like a hawk. nerve- of steel 3nd 3 arches-devil- my-care manner nut mum non of the bandit chic! than at the anus po- liceman. He is I. man who will stand up nnd (toe the ï¬re till his 1m bullet. is gone and then will clinch with his wagon- in. us has had some of the most du- perate characters in this union work- ing tor him as co‘rbon nnd bu Ion: neural to their last noeoun: during his cum:- in the Southwut. He is 1 man 0! a. thousand out! will get a high price [ram the state (or hit nervioel. When asked concerning his plum. Housman said um he hnd none other than to look out for the men who Were wanted for oflenoes vhlch were up- posed to have begn computed by them ;;chB;;£Ky-t; e†bunch of gluten!" bones the sand: of the desert. which m continually shitting. soon hide the del- enm picture tron: um, and the If)“: hole and faced the posse with h!- six- shootery Inside of two minutes he was ï¬lled with bullet holes. the money we: dug out and he won left for the crown to feed on, which In 1 cheep and chem- able method of burial favored for out- laws in Arizona, I: It eaves tunon! e:-' pen-es end gives the bitm- eomethlu to ye! $7.. . Cemeteries u e metter‘ot toot on not much In demand In Arbou- except In the great centers of civillutlon. It the coyote. tell to reduce the undue ,A,._ h. -11..--i..- vuyyuv- °-___ the Mexican’s headâ€"ell that remained otxhim above the suriece. it Ill hour: before the pursuing perty reached the coyote holes- With Moeemn were I couple of Indian guides with their dogs. whose services the nnchmnn had ee- clred .to track down the'culprit. One of these brutes was soon mining emund the bayonet bush, and Seinvem. see- ing the sameness up. â€Lent of his LI. -1- tun -uyv . ----â€"_ ___ Down into the mud the Mexicnniment plunged, taking care to put the money I says bag beneath him as he burrowed his remex way into the coyote hole. On the tide em] 1 from which his pursuers must approach sense there was a large bunch of Spanish break bayonet grass. which completely hid were the Mexican's headâ€"ail that remained and a 0!. him above the surtace. it was hourl the a Detox-e the pursuing party reached the was t coyote holes- With Housman were a hurni couple of Indian guide- with their dogs. All 0 whm mrvim the ranchman had ae- were mu: count! ordlne mph: oath t Scotct mil. ( every Then mad: mll In hnve t ml]. ( more I! on! 150 y I: 7.84 mile i II n. 1 bet“: dimn meter third- : mu times ton n the J one-h: 13 11v whllo [our . ï¬nk! t mum Anal): the I; ma. and: “on: undo tween fewer phllo: servo min-1 area years Whe: hi i (lupin “l 1: mode In No show nic- ot it to Na Icon. contrast on 2 further go. 9 would have liked gut Ir. Chamber!†whether anq â€-u. to me the word- ot Wimun What jlnely. "lacked menu“ at the a mason Wain; to a. m o! no 3 birth, rank and ï¬ne breeding â€"-tho jute superiority of which mn- alu : rm deny the existence. but at vhxcl My shun recoxntud the in- trlnfl ï¬ner?" ‘ build What the d o! no call vhld trlnfl old u said I mtln menu ton l antes flesh omce lnval the t ;,H’utoriedl Ineomotivu. Sch ‘iiï¬c American: The anon: onâ€" gine :enzml." which was med by Cnpu a James J. Andrew: and Ms party ’ raiders In an attempt to burn the I: get on the Western and Mk:- £193; iny onAprll 12 ms. ham sent “thye Nashville Chum I: ELL unallrouitobcntuplntho union é'pot nt Chattanooga n a monu- ment . the hem or thnt during mid. any: nanny Review. It will be roman and that the engine and m- oral! >can wen stolen "on I, pu- says i Railway Review. It will be remex “‘06 that the engine And let- eral l s cars were stolen from a pu- eenge :rain while the crew wee at break :t at Big Shanty. The raiden were 358], pursued by the conductor and 5 art! of confederate soldiers in the a ' cling engine. The “Genera" was i :ily abandoned and the‘bridge burni echelne had to be given up. All 0 he put). numbering wine :2. were itured and ‘elght were executed an up: - The anrvlvora built I nonu- ment ‘ memory of the I“! in the nation (cemetery at Chum Roch the L lo the In). quanta! m have four dllterent n!’ ' uâ€"th. madam test.“ an (on- or untied mile a 0.0:“. » mum of mm M‘- men the two; then thin It“: lle of 5,928 {9' t. and the Id“!- -.'I20 feet; four various mum, no of which I. am in *. «on em? 'ountry h“ In owl mile. The Roman: hurt that! tum. 1030 pace: which must ubnut x "M h “I in length; un- wcrbe to C' (â€I'- Menu-l. ppm; cï¬pmxy. The Gonna! can’t-u "(.318 feet In length. a tour and 1 half than u Inn: 12. The Dutch. the Danes Ind mm- enjoy a mu. that In 11.. out. three and_ ope-h!!! "In. II or one. and the “III In nine in walking one of their n we get In welklu ï¬ve mllee. mile 1- 9,153 rude long. whlle inly 1,760 yards. The man July e few feet lower then Rom mile 1e nhorher. whlle In and the Tux-km: miles an a longer. The Swedish mile ml. Ian. and the Vienna you me yards In length. 80 here bf twelve dllenntmllee. end all these ere other mm at not countlng the French kllo- ‘hlch ls rether lees than twe- ’ 1 mile. The Brulllene have um In one and one-fourth- lonx as our mile; the Neapoli- lo 18 about the sum length. neee rl. or mile. ll two end times ours: the Rum vent ghthe ee long us our mile. 2 Perelen sandal-d h a my. IF 011F383“ IATIONI. all New: English-Opening 'u miffxnilu long. which I. e equal to the law. so Ia- . £139 ragdgrs of _ thon's ..,.‘,g l.â€" £201.30)! AT WATW. Inter for British “Wan on That Occuion. C. Chmbeflun died In sun- In., Sept. 2. He wu 93 out in: be was nine he cam In- aulngtqn'o soldiers :21 “than A A..- Very low merchnnt anon cannon which to "div ho- “ 3nd 1876.‘ Fever utiii veto with the: enough. and even yetinment lived in no Idunc~ re. Th. system, serenity and lay (of this man's lite my‘ de- gnmendntion. But they will we it. (or interest in him culâ€" beione the beginning of hi! ‘1 the not that. u a boy of nine ;e nw Napoleon at Waterloo. lie signiï¬cance of thnt {act to {but in rehtiqn with the illic- anoleon Bonn-2x10 It til. the grant mm: which ended nry cuter. Ho mm m 1“" you: .30. u u merchtut NI- vd with n competem in ma. :ldod in Stamlord and! III mutant in his life was ecu..- , ,-AA-_-I __.A A‘ u'r nan-Adan] am; up glee!- i 'iiae' mam mama by I: also varies II diluent conn- innâ€"h "ignite! .- w a. moon mm, I!" Innâ€"not a tailorâ€"Roche. unor- [no English at Barm’ . It" Napoleon and Welling- râ€"nnd aw both In the early He nw the Iron Duke In tho ‘I Napalm in the mint. A: 1: mm at the tomb In the] ‘I opened the casts! to let hen a lad, look at the [Ace of is Corporal. He saw It, ‘ J gel on the Western and Atlan- uy on April 12. 1868. has been the Nashville. Cinnamon u Railroad to be at up In the hot at Chumnom :- a monu- tho heroes of that darin; mid. n noun-to 9! Sum. . anon Stu: "And how in my >l friend Bun-on getting on?" ma who had rammed to his I! after I Ion: um. a data in} my: _ . apechl ability." 1' hard Mm mentioned In con- vlth'uly of your election." Int'l Just the point. Re In: aim! to go ahead quietly and a business. He don't have .c m web I bflcht N! W In would dinghy u- lllty' I «(we know tint he Inna-c u' once."